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Mapping the field of child marriage : evidence, gaps, and future directions from a large-scale systematic scoping review, 2000–2019 Manahil Siddiqi and Margaret E. Greene

By: Siddiqi, Manahil.
Contributor(s): Greene, Margaret E.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Journal of Adolescent Health.Publisher: Elsevier, 2022Subject(s): CHILDREN'S RIGHTS | CHILD MARRIAGE | CULTURAL ISSUES | ETHNIC COMMUNITIES | FORCED MARRIAGE | HEALTH | SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS | YOUNG WOMEN | INTERNATIONALOnline resources: DOI: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2021.09.020 (Open access) | Read the Editorial introducing this Supplement In: Journal of Adolescent Health, 2022, 70(3): S9-S16Summary: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development explicitly calls for an end to child, early, and forced marriages, a harmful practice that has been experienced by 650 million girls and women globally. The COVID-19 pandemic threatens to halt progress toward this goal and highlights the need to assess research progress and link emerging knowledge with efforts to prevent and respond to child marriage. We conducted a systematic search of publications focused on child marriage covering four languages (English, Spanish, Portuguese, and French), encompassing a 20-year period (1 January 2000–31 December 2019) and including peer-reviewed and gray literature across all major geographic regions of the world. Our review identified and analyzed 1,068 publications from an initial number of 4,081 abstracts screened, finding that studies on the prevalence, determinants, and consequences of child marriage represented a majority of the total publications. Including publications in Spanish and Portuguese yielded results from Latin America and the Caribbean, Mozambique, and Europe, and including publications in French yielded results from West Africa and the Maghreb, in addition to English language publications covering both these and other parts of the word. Our review of the evolution and distribution of research over time and space calls for a greater focus of research on interventions preventing child marriage and responding to the needs of individuals married as children, a multilinguistic approach to knowledge exchange, and for research to be conducted in neglected high-prevalence settings. (Authors' abstract). This is one article in a supplement titled: Shared Roots, Different Branches: Expanding Understanding of Child Marriage in Diverse Settings, edited by Relebohile Moletsane, Madhumita Das, Alessandra Guedes and Joar Svanemyr. It focuses on the impact of and the Sustainable Development Goal of ending child, early and forced marriage and unions by 2030. Record #7561
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Journal of Adolescent Health, 2022, 70(3): S9-S16

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development explicitly calls for an end to child, early, and forced marriages, a harmful practice that has been experienced by 650 million girls and women globally. The COVID-19 pandemic threatens to halt progress toward this goal and highlights the need to assess research progress and link emerging knowledge with efforts to prevent and respond to child marriage. We conducted a systematic search of publications focused on child marriage covering four languages (English, Spanish, Portuguese, and French), encompassing a 20-year period (1 January 2000–31 December 2019) and including peer-reviewed and gray literature across all major geographic regions of the world. Our review identified and analyzed 1,068 publications from an initial number of 4,081 abstracts screened, finding that studies on the prevalence, determinants, and consequences of child marriage represented a majority of the total publications. Including publications in Spanish and Portuguese yielded results from Latin America and the Caribbean, Mozambique, and Europe, and including publications in French yielded results from West Africa and the Maghreb, in addition to English language publications covering both these and other parts of the word. Our review of the evolution and distribution of research over time and space calls for a greater focus of research on interventions preventing child marriage and responding to the needs of individuals married as children, a multilinguistic approach to knowledge exchange, and for research to be conducted in neglected high-prevalence settings. (Authors' abstract).

This is one article in a supplement titled: Shared Roots, Different Branches: Expanding Understanding of Child Marriage in Diverse Settings, edited by Relebohile Moletsane, Madhumita Das, Alessandra Guedes and Joar Svanemyr. It focuses on the impact of and the Sustainable Development Goal of ending child, early and forced marriage and unions by 2030. Record #7561